Redeemed (Dirty Air 4)
“Why are you working here if you’re dating Santiago? Not that I’m not grateful for your help, but...”
Disappointment taints my excitement. Rather than stew in my negativity, I say the first thing that comes to mind. “I’m interested in opening a coffee shop myself, so I thought the best way to learn was from someone who has one.”
Nice. A+ response. I swear, I’ll stop lying once I reveal my identity to Matteo. Until then, I plan on weaving a web of lies with my hypocritical fingers because I can’t bear facing the truth.
I hate myself a bit more each day I work here. It’s draining to pretend I’m not dying to learn everything personal about him and give our relationship a real chance.
He purses his lips. “Ahh. I didn’t know you were interested in that.”
Yeah, neither did I. “I’ve spent time visiting different shops and learning about them.” Okay, that’s true. I tend to visit a Starbucks from time to time when I run out of coffee for the week.
“What have you learned so far from me?”
“That you love your shot of espresso with a dash of milk and you sing ABBA’s ‘Take A Chance on Me’ when you’re thinking about something.” I mentally face-palm myself at how stalkerish I sound.
“You pay attention.”
That’s one way to reframe my psychotic behavior.
I smile. “Yes. Plus, I’ve been watching you make different drinks and learning for myself.”
He pats the counter with a smile. “If you’re interested in learning more, you can start working behind the counter with me.”
“Really?” The question leaves my lips with a squeak.
“Sure. Come in tomorrow an hour earlier and I’ll teach you some of the basics
.”
“Yes! I’d love that! Sure!” I cringe at my desperation.
“If only my son was as excited as you are to learn about the family business.” Matteo chuckles to himself.
My chest tightens. It’s such a casual statement, but it has me grinning to myself. I don’t want to be petty about my supposed little brother. It’s not his fault he wants to go to a university and live his best life in Milan. The selfish part of me wants something Matteo can be proud of me about, and this seems like my way in. If it means learning all about coffee and posing as someone I’m not, so be it.
“How is your son?” I offer to ease some of my guilt.
“He’s good. I’ve been actually meaning to ask you something about dinner tomorrow.”
“Do you have to reschedule?” Please don’t reschedule.
“No.” He shakes his head furiously. “The opposite. I don’t want to intrude, but the moment I told my son about meeting Santiago Alatorre and being invited to dinner with him, he was excited. He begged me to come along. See, we heard the rumors of him living next door. We even saw some reporters occasionally, but we never had the chance to meet your boyfriend ourselves. So, I wanted to ask if my son could come with me to meet Santiago, but I understand if you both don’t want to.”
The panic building up inside of me is replaced by a sense of disappointment. He wants to bring his son to dinner with us? All because of Santiago? What the hell am I supposed to say to that? Sorry, no, your offspring shouldn’t come along because I want to get to know you all by myself. I can’t exactly say no when Matteo clearly wants to be a cool dad to his kid.
Instead of yelling an obscenity, I nod my head. “Sure. We’d love to meet him.”
Santiago’s going to hate the plan even more than me. A little brother crashing our dinner party wasn’t part of the agreement, especially someone who seems like a huge fan. Instead of getting upset, I shelve the feelings. It’s probably normal for a son to beg their parent to join us. If I were in their shoes, I would do anything to meet my idol.
I need to focus on my end goal. Choosing the easy path isn’t an option, so I go with my gut. If Matteo and his son want a superstar, I’ll give them one. I only hope Santiago doesn’t kill me for it.
“Why would you say yes to something like that?” Santiago passes me the salad supplies and a step-by-step guide on a sheet of paper.
“Seriously, a how-to-create-a-salad manual?” I snatch the piece of paper and give it a once-over.
He frowns. “You could’ve said ‘no.’ Ever heard of the word?”
“Based on how I said yes to your crazy plan of spending a whole weekend with your family, I can see why you’d think that.”